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  3. For people unaware of all the role-playing game (RPG) subgenres, here’s a brief explainer:

For people unaware of all the role-playing game (RPG) subgenres, here’s a brief explainer:

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  • Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
    Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
    Chris Trottier
    wrote last edited by atomicpoet@atomicpoet.org
    #1

    For people unaware of all the role-playing game (RPG) subgenres, here’s a brief explainer:

    TTRPG – Tabletop RPG. The original RPG. Played on a literal table. Dice, paper, friends, arguments. Everything else evolved from here.

    Examples:

    • Dungeons & Dragons
    • Pathfinder
    • Shadowrun

    LARP / LARPG – Live Action Role-Playing Game. The version where people physically dress as their characters and act things out in person. Foam weapons, costumes, fake accents, and enough in-character drama to power three soap operas. LARPing as a concept goes back to the 1970s, right alongside early tabletop like D&D, but it didn’t get the “LARP” acronym until the 1980s.

    Examples:

    • Vampire: The Masquerade LARP events
    • Amtgard
    • Dagorhir

    CRPG – Computer RPG. Born from tabletop, moved onto computers. The CPU handles all the dice rolls you don’t want to argue about.

    Examples:

    • Baldur’s Gate
    • Fallout (1997)
    • Planescape: Torment

    TBRPG – Turn-Based RPG. Everyone takes turns. This is the “classic” RPG format, so people often just call it an RPG.

    Examples:

    • Divinity: Original Sin II
    • Wasteland 3
    • Trails in the Sky

    SRPG / TRPG – Strategy (or Tactical) RPG. Same turn-based idea, but on grids—squares or hexes—with multiple units to command.

    Examples:

    • Fire Emblem
    • Final Fantasy Tactics
    • Tactics Ogre

    RTwPRPG – Real-Time with Pause RPG. You pause to assign orders, unpause to watch them happen. Baldur’s Gate fans still swear by this.

    Examples:

    • Baldur’s Gate II
    • Pillars of Eternity
    • Dragon Age: Origins

    ARPG – Action RPG. Real-time combat. No turns, no waiting—just swing when you feel like it.

    Examples:

    • Diablo II
    • Dark Souls
    • Kingdom Hearts

    IRPG – Idle RPG. The game mostly plays itself. Perfect for people who like progression bars but don’t like playing.

    Examples:

    • Clicker Heroes
    • Idle Champions of the Forgotten Realms
    • AFK Arena

    DBRPG – Deck-Building RPG. RPG progression tied to card decks. You level up by upgrading your deck rather than just your stats.

    Examples:

    • Slay the Spire
    • Monster Train
    • Griftlands

    SurRPG – Survival RPG. Harsh environments, resource scarcity, and RPG progression systems. The game’s main plot is “don’t die.”

    Examples:

    • Outward
    • Kenshi
    • The Long Dark

    RLRPG – Rogue-like RPG. Procedural generation, permadeath, and heavy RNG baked into an RPG framework.

    Examples:

    • Darkest Dungeon
    • Stoneshard
    • Tangledeep

    SLRPG – Souls-like RPG. RPGs built around Soulsborne-style combat: stamina-based melee, brutal bosses, minimalist storytelling.

    Examples:

    • Dark Souls III
    • The Surge 2
    • Lords of the Fallen

    JRPG – Japanese RPG. Made in Japan or heavily inspired by Japan’s approach. Console-heavy. Drama-heavy. Usually turn-based or action hybrid.

    Examples:

    • Final Fantasy VII
    • Persona 5
    • Dragon Quest XI

    KRPG – Korean RPG. Similar to JRPGs but usually more PC-oriented. Often online.

    Examples:

    • Lost Ark
    • MapleStory
    • Vindictus

    WRPG – Western RPG. Pretty much any RPG from the West that isn’t imitating JRPGs.

    Examples:

    • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
    • Mass Effect
    • Fallout: New Vegas

    PRPG – Polish RPG. Technically a WRPG branch, but with its own personality. Darker tone, folkloric influences, and PC-first mentality.

    Examples:

    • The Witcher series
    • Seven: The Days Long Gone
    • The Thaumaturge

    GRPG – German RPG. RPGs developed in Germany, usually open-world Eurojank epics with handcrafted maps, tough early-game difficulty, and an earnest-but-campy tone.

    Examples:

    • Gothic II
    • Risen
    • ELEX

    LatRPG – Latin American RPG. RPGs from Latin America, often mixing local folklore, indigenous mythology, and JRPG/ARPG elements. “LARPG” isn’t used because Live Action Role-Playing already took it.

    Examples:

    • Mulaka
    • Tunche
    • Cris Tales

    MORPG – Multiplayer Online RPG. Small-scale online RPGs, often instanced or lobby-based.

    Examples:

    • Phantasy Star Online 2
    • Monster Hunter: World,
    • Dauntless

    MMORPG – Massively Multiplayer Online RPG. Persistent worlds, thousands of players, endless grinds.

    Examples:

    • World of Warcraft
    • Final Fantasy XIV
    • Guild Wars 2

    MOORPG – Massive Online Open-World RPG. Marketing term for the “bigger” MMOs. You’ve seen the ads.

    Examples:

    • Black Desert Online
    • ArcheAge
    • EVE Online

    MRPG – Mobile RPG. Made for phones. Often gacha-heavy, session-based, or both.

    Examples:

    • Honkai: Star Rail
    • Raid: Shadow Legends
    • Summoners War

    BRPG – Browser RPG. Runs in your web browser. Lightweight, accessible, usually free-to-play.

    Examples:

    • Kingdom of Loathing
    • AdventureQuest Worlds
    • Urban Dead

    VRRPG – Virtual Reality RPG. Built for VR platforms. Often more about immersion than traditional RPG mechanics.

    Examples:

    • Zenith: The Last City
    • OrbusVR
    • The Mage’s Tale

    BBRPG – Bulletin Board RPG. Forum- or post-based roleplay. Writing-heavy, rules-light.

    Examples:

    • Gaia Online RP forums
    • NationStates roleplay boards
    • Myth-Weavers

    So yeah, there’s a lot of alphabet in the RPG soup. Some of it’s legit, some of it’s marketing garbage, and some of it’s just fans inventing labels because that’s what fans do.

    But they’re all chasing the same dopamine hit: numbers go up, loot gets shinier, and suddenly your “quick session” has eaten the entire weekend.

    run_atalanta 😷💯R 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier shared this topic
    • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier

      For people unaware of all the role-playing game (RPG) subgenres, here’s a brief explainer:

      TTRPG – Tabletop RPG. The original RPG. Played on a literal table. Dice, paper, friends, arguments. Everything else evolved from here.

      Examples:

      • Dungeons & Dragons
      • Pathfinder
      • Shadowrun

      LARP / LARPG – Live Action Role-Playing Game. The version where people physically dress as their characters and act things out in person. Foam weapons, costumes, fake accents, and enough in-character drama to power three soap operas. LARPing as a concept goes back to the 1970s, right alongside early tabletop like D&D, but it didn’t get the “LARP” acronym until the 1980s.

      Examples:

      • Vampire: The Masquerade LARP events
      • Amtgard
      • Dagorhir

      CRPG – Computer RPG. Born from tabletop, moved onto computers. The CPU handles all the dice rolls you don’t want to argue about.

      Examples:

      • Baldur’s Gate
      • Fallout (1997)
      • Planescape: Torment

      TBRPG – Turn-Based RPG. Everyone takes turns. This is the “classic” RPG format, so people often just call it an RPG.

      Examples:

      • Divinity: Original Sin II
      • Wasteland 3
      • Trails in the Sky

      SRPG / TRPG – Strategy (or Tactical) RPG. Same turn-based idea, but on grids—squares or hexes—with multiple units to command.

      Examples:

      • Fire Emblem
      • Final Fantasy Tactics
      • Tactics Ogre

      RTwPRPG – Real-Time with Pause RPG. You pause to assign orders, unpause to watch them happen. Baldur’s Gate fans still swear by this.

      Examples:

      • Baldur’s Gate II
      • Pillars of Eternity
      • Dragon Age: Origins

      ARPG – Action RPG. Real-time combat. No turns, no waiting—just swing when you feel like it.

      Examples:

      • Diablo II
      • Dark Souls
      • Kingdom Hearts

      IRPG – Idle RPG. The game mostly plays itself. Perfect for people who like progression bars but don’t like playing.

      Examples:

      • Clicker Heroes
      • Idle Champions of the Forgotten Realms
      • AFK Arena

      DBRPG – Deck-Building RPG. RPG progression tied to card decks. You level up by upgrading your deck rather than just your stats.

      Examples:

      • Slay the Spire
      • Monster Train
      • Griftlands

      SurRPG – Survival RPG. Harsh environments, resource scarcity, and RPG progression systems. The game’s main plot is “don’t die.”

      Examples:

      • Outward
      • Kenshi
      • The Long Dark

      RLRPG – Rogue-like RPG. Procedural generation, permadeath, and heavy RNG baked into an RPG framework.

      Examples:

      • Darkest Dungeon
      • Stoneshard
      • Tangledeep

      SLRPG – Souls-like RPG. RPGs built around Soulsborne-style combat: stamina-based melee, brutal bosses, minimalist storytelling.

      Examples:

      • Dark Souls III
      • The Surge 2
      • Lords of the Fallen

      JRPG – Japanese RPG. Made in Japan or heavily inspired by Japan’s approach. Console-heavy. Drama-heavy. Usually turn-based or action hybrid.

      Examples:

      • Final Fantasy VII
      • Persona 5
      • Dragon Quest XI

      KRPG – Korean RPG. Similar to JRPGs but usually more PC-oriented. Often online.

      Examples:

      • Lost Ark
      • MapleStory
      • Vindictus

      WRPG – Western RPG. Pretty much any RPG from the West that isn’t imitating JRPGs.

      Examples:

      • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
      • Mass Effect
      • Fallout: New Vegas

      PRPG – Polish RPG. Technically a WRPG branch, but with its own personality. Darker tone, folkloric influences, and PC-first mentality.

      Examples:

      • The Witcher series
      • Seven: The Days Long Gone
      • The Thaumaturge

      GRPG – German RPG. RPGs developed in Germany, usually open-world Eurojank epics with handcrafted maps, tough early-game difficulty, and an earnest-but-campy tone.

      Examples:

      • Gothic II
      • Risen
      • ELEX

      LatRPG – Latin American RPG. RPGs from Latin America, often mixing local folklore, indigenous mythology, and JRPG/ARPG elements. “LARPG” isn’t used because Live Action Role-Playing already took it.

      Examples:

      • Mulaka
      • Tunche
      • Cris Tales

      MORPG – Multiplayer Online RPG. Small-scale online RPGs, often instanced or lobby-based.

      Examples:

      • Phantasy Star Online 2
      • Monster Hunter: World,
      • Dauntless

      MMORPG – Massively Multiplayer Online RPG. Persistent worlds, thousands of players, endless grinds.

      Examples:

      • World of Warcraft
      • Final Fantasy XIV
      • Guild Wars 2

      MOORPG – Massive Online Open-World RPG. Marketing term for the “bigger” MMOs. You’ve seen the ads.

      Examples:

      • Black Desert Online
      • ArcheAge
      • EVE Online

      MRPG – Mobile RPG. Made for phones. Often gacha-heavy, session-based, or both.

      Examples:

      • Honkai: Star Rail
      • Raid: Shadow Legends
      • Summoners War

      BRPG – Browser RPG. Runs in your web browser. Lightweight, accessible, usually free-to-play.

      Examples:

      • Kingdom of Loathing
      • AdventureQuest Worlds
      • Urban Dead

      VRRPG – Virtual Reality RPG. Built for VR platforms. Often more about immersion than traditional RPG mechanics.

      Examples:

      • Zenith: The Last City
      • OrbusVR
      • The Mage’s Tale

      BBRPG – Bulletin Board RPG. Forum- or post-based roleplay. Writing-heavy, rules-light.

      Examples:

      • Gaia Online RP forums
      • NationStates roleplay boards
      • Myth-Weavers

      So yeah, there’s a lot of alphabet in the RPG soup. Some of it’s legit, some of it’s marketing garbage, and some of it’s just fans inventing labels because that’s what fans do.

      But they’re all chasing the same dopamine hit: numbers go up, loot gets shinier, and suddenly your “quick session” has eaten the entire weekend.

      run_atalanta 😷💯R This user is from outside of this forum
      run_atalanta 😷💯R This user is from outside of this forum
      run_atalanta 😷💯
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @atomicpoet sincere question: Where does Moria fit?

      (I would qualify as someone who simply doesn't play any computer games at all - with Moria being the sole exception, which I used to play on a mainframe)

      Chris TrottierA 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • run_atalanta 😷💯R run_atalanta 😷💯

        @atomicpoet sincere question: Where does Moria fit?

        (I would qualify as someone who simply doesn't play any computer games at all - with Moria being the sole exception, which I used to play on a mainframe)

        Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
        Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
        Chris Trottier
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        run_atalanta 😷💯 Do you mean Dungeons of Moria or the two Lord of the Rings games?

        I suspect you mean the former. If so, that’s a TBRPG, RLRPG, WRPG, and CRPG. 😁

        1 Reply Last reply
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